![]() So this summer – as people across the country celebrate the progress made in this country – I think it is worth remembering the role that Angels in America has played in helping this change come about. Angels in America certainly belongs in this category – as do shows such as Rent and The Laramie Project – which have helped move the needle in this direction, and all of us in the theatre community ought to be proud that our beloved art form has placed such a vital role in changing so many minds that have helped lead to these historic cultural changes. I think it is undeniable that some of the most impacting shows of the past quarter-century are the ones highlighting these themes, given how much things have changed for the better in this time period. As more and more shows over the past two or three decades (if not longer) have premiered and reached mainstream audiences while highlighting issues affecting the LGBTQIA+ community – such as religious-themed discrimination, as well as the AIDS epidemic of the 80s – it seems that these themes have come to be seen by more and more people as the defining civil rights issue of our time. Indeed, much of this shift can be attributed to a larger impact that theatre, in general, has had on American culture in terms of how it has come to be far more accepting of equal rights than it had been even just a few decades ago.įor many years, the arts have played a major role in shifting American culture on a variety of issues related to civil rights and social justice, and this is no exception. Knowing this, I believe it is worth considering the role that Angels in America may have had in helping to bring about this cultural shift. Yet at this point, to say that there has not been any progress over the years – since the premiere of this play that is about the same age as me – would be a false statement. Of course, this isn’t to say that we’ve necessarily achieved full equality in the United States. Even before then, the decade leading up to that historic ruling has been one of several individuals across the country – from artists to celebrities to political leaders to regular people – opening their eyes to the fact that this is a major issue of equal rights while taking stronger stands against those who choose to discriminate. The Supreme Court ruled once and for all that – in all 50 states – couples have a right to marry whomever they choose, regardless of the gender of that person they love. Today, I’d like to think you’d be hard-pressed to find very many potential audience members that would openly admit that they wouldn’t see a show such as this on the basis of the social themes and issues that it tackles.įast forward to 2020, and it seems that America has changed a great deal since Mr. Nonetheless, I think it is still fair to say that back when this play was first released in 1993 – not to mention when the play takes place in 1985 – that there was still much more open discrimination against LGBTQIA+ people in America that would have made some people less likely to watch a play like this. It still won several awards and was well-received by the average theatergoer, many of whom have always been ahead of the times on this issue. Of course, none of these things stopped the play from being successful and receiving critical acclaim. ![]() Information based on fact – with regards to the AIDS epidemic – was still just starting to reach the general public, and the overall political climate in the post-Reagan era was still far more socially conservative than it is today. There was a lot less understanding of the situations and the discrimination that gay Americans – whether they were openly gay and still in the closet – dealt with on a daily basis. When it was first produced in 1993, it was a time when there was much less acceptance in mainstream society for LGBTQIA+ rights. Yet given events in recent years – in which America has seen a great deal of progress on the issues that are the subject of Angels – I think now is an especially good time to revisit Kushner’s epic play, as its historical significance is just now starting to become fully realized. However, it is his 6-hour, two-part drama Angels in America that remains the most popular and well-received of all his works today. ![]() Tony Kushner has had enormous success as a writer for both the stage and screen, with his work among the most critically acclaimed of any writer from his generation.
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